Inquiring Minds
En podcast av Indre Viskontas
461 Avsnitt
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21 Steven Novella - No, GMOs Won't Harm Your Health
Publicerades: 2014-02-14 -
20 Maria Konnikova - How to Make Your Brain Work Better
Publicerades: 2014-02-07 -
19 Kari Byron - How to Safely Blow Stuff Up When You're Pregnant
Publicerades: 2014-01-31 -
18 Eugenie Scott & Ann Reid - The Assault on Science Education
Publicerades: 2014-01-24 -
17 Michael Pollan - The Science of Eating Well (And Not Falling For Diet Fads)
Publicerades: 2014-01-16 -
16 Deborah Blum - The Science of Poisoning
Publicerades: 2014-01-10 -
15 Mark Ruffalo - Our 100 Percent Clean Energy Future
Publicerades: 2014-01-03 -
14 Carolyn Porco - Why Seeing Earth From Space Matters
Publicerades: 2013-12-27 -
13 Ara Norenzayan - Why Do Atheists Exist?
Publicerades: 2013-12-20 -
12 Joshua Greene – The New Science of Morality
Publicerades: 2013-12-13 -
11 Maryn McKenna - Our Scary Post-Antibiotic Future
Publicerades: 2013-12-06 -
10 Simon Singh - How the Simpsons Have Secretly Been Teaching You Math
Publicerades: 2013-11-22 -
9 Michael Mann - From Computer Geek to Political Giant Slayer
Publicerades: 2013-11-15 -
8 Alison Gopnik - We All Start Out as Scientists, But Some of Us Forget
Publicerades: 2013-11-07 -
7 George Johnson - Why Most of What You've Heard About Cancer is Wrong
Publicerades: 2013-11-01 -
6 Jonathan Haidt - This is Why Your Political Opponents Hate You
Publicerades: 2013-10-25 -
5 Dan Kahan and Stephan Lewandowsky - How Do You Make People Give a Damn About Climate Change?
Publicerades: 2013-10-18 -
4 Randy Schekman - This 2013 Nobel Laureate Says College Is Way Too Expensive
Publicerades: 2013-10-11 -
3 Sylvia Earle - Why the Oceans Are Not Too Big to Fail
Publicerades: 2013-10-04 -
2 Alan Weisman - Can We Finally Have a Serious Talk About Population?
Publicerades: 2013-09-27
Each week we bring you a new, in-depth exploration of the space where science and society collide. We’re committed to the idea that making an effort to understand the world around you though science and critical thinking can benefit everyone—and lead to better decisions. We want to find out what’s true, what’s left to discover, and why it all matters.